Getting back to that January 1930 issue of The Builder magazine (see yesterday’s post below), I also noted the following brief that appears on Page 31. I share it here because when this magazine was published, there were no research lodges in the United States. England had Quatuor Coronati 2076 in London and The Lodge of Research 2429 in Leicester (and maybe others?), but the first lodge of research in America was still in the future.
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
‘1930: Plural Membership and Research Lodges’
Getting back to that January 1930 issue of The Builder magazine (see yesterday’s post below), I also noted the following brief that appears on Page 31. I share it here because when this magazine was published, there were no research lodges in the United States. England had Quatuor Coronati 2076 in London and The Lodge of Research 2429 in Leicester (and maybe others?), but the first lodge of research in America was still in the future.
The Grand Lodge of North Carolina constituted North Carolina Lodge of Research 666 in Monroe in 1931. The Grand Lodge of New York launched The American Lodge of Research weeks later in May. The former went dark in 1954 when the latter was firing on all twelve cylinders—and we’re still at labor, and just installed our officers two weeks ago.
Anyway, the following editor’s comment (Haydon was Librarian of the Grand Lodge of Canada in Ontario and the Secretary of the Toronto Society for Masonic Research) and the resulting two paragraphs in reply constitute a snapshot of the thinking from that pre-research lodge era. Enjoy.
Plural Membership
and Research Lodges
You have stated your opinion more than once that “dual” or “plural” membership would permit the formation of real “Research Lodges.” But these lodges would not be concerned with initiating men into Masonry, their work not touching anyone who is not a Master Mason.
N.W.J. Haydon
Canada
There have been several instances within the last ten years in which an attempt was made to found a Research Lodge in America. Those cases known to us have been in widely separated states, but the outcome in each was the same. There was apparently no adequate provision for financial obligations and there was no by-law or general understanding among the members to prohibit, or even limit, initiations into the lodge. The result of these two causes in conjunction was that the lodge accepted applications in the usual way in order to obtain the initiation fees, which it needed to meet its expenses. This had two obvious consequences. Owing to the pressure of ritualistic work there was no time left for reading and discussing papers; and owing to the difficulty of divining beforehand whether a profane is going to be interested in Masonic research or not (and the strong probability is that he will not be interested), the original founders of the lodge were soon swamped by “average” Masons—“good fellows,” but bored stiff by anything “highbrow.”
In order to meet this necessity for a carefully selected membership of those who have proved their interest in the intellectual side of Masonry, all successful Research Lodges (wherever they exist) either have by-laws against receiving applications for initiation, or a general understanding, rigidly lived up to, that none will be received. But this implies that unless a Mason can belong to more than one lodge, he must sacrifice the ordinary lodge life and interests, which very few zealous Masons are willing to do. Thus dual or plural membership does open up the possibility of founding a Research Lodge in any jurisdiction permitting it. And we may say once more, to remove a persistent misapprehension, that there is no need for any special charter to start one; and in reality, no need for any special by-laws to maintain one. The warrant of Quatuor Coronati Lodge, for example, is in precisely the same form as that of any other English lodge. It is empowered to initiate, pass, and raise candidates like any other lodge, even though it never does. Naturally those proposing to start such a lodge would explain their object to the Masonic authorities, and would have to receive their passive approbation at least. But considering the general interest in Masonic education now aroused in the United States, this should not be difficult. We rather wonder which of the Grand Lodges that have adopted the principle of plural membership, or are thinking of doing so, will have the honor of being the pioneer in such a development.
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
‘1930: The Masonic Education Movement’
A hundred years ago, there were independent groups within American Freemasonry that offered the thinking Mason avenues for education, such as their periodicals, books, correspondence courses, etc. Groups unaffiliated with grand lodges arose because there was some demand for the instruction, but the grand lodges, for the most part, were not supplying it.
The Philalethes Society and the Masonic Service Association are the only survivors from that era, but there were others, such as the National Masonic Research Society, whose leadership was comprised of scholars, authors, and other names we recognize to this day. It published The Builder, one of the best monthly magazines from that time, at least for readers who like gleaning the meaning of Masonry through instructive and advocacy journalism.
I hereby brazenly lift the following editorial from its January 1930 issue which, most assuredly, was penned before the Black Tuesday on Wall Street that unleashed the Great Depression, which negated the membership boom experienced across the country since World War I—and shuttered the National Masonic Research Society the following year. I point out this bit of history because the writer of this essay clearly is discussing a Freemasonry that has membership and resources in abundance.
(If you are under age fifty, use your favorite search engine to decode the words gramophone, telegraph, et al.)
As you’ll see, the more things change, the more they stay the same. That said, the following is inspiring and informative. If you labor in the quarries, frustrated by the solitude of trying to learn what this fraternity professes, the reasons for that disconnect are explained. More importantly, the remedy is prescribed.
One conspicuous prophecy is the mention of research lodges; there were no research lodges in the United States at the time this was published. (See tomorrow’s edition of The Magpie Mason.)
I found this by happenstance while preparing for what will be my first research paper for Civil War Lodge of Research 1865 at some future time. And I took the liberty of including advertisements from the pages of this journal. Enjoy.
The Masonic Education Movement
If we look back over the course of events in the American Masonic world for the last fifteen years, or even the last ten years, one of the most outstanding features will appear to be the emergence of Masonic Education as an object of official concern and policy. Scarcely a volume of Grand Lodge Proceedings now comes out but has something to report on the subject. The individual Mason, as a rule, does not know much of what is being done outside his own jurisdiction, if indeed he knows anything very much of what is being done within it. On the other hand, those who are actively interested, whether officially or otherwise, are apt to miss the forest because they are so intent upon the trees in their own vicinity.
There has been a great variety in the methods adopted, and still greater differences in regard to estimate of results. It has been remarked, by several different observers, that there is a curious relation between the character of the reports and the nature of the machinery adopted. Where there are paid officials charged with educational work in the various lodges, one is apt to find most glowing reports of the efficacy of the work and the value of the results. Where it is undertaken by unpaid voluntary workers, the reports are often pessimistic in the extreme.
This is really not curious at all, it is most natural and human, aside from the fact that there may be objective reasons for the difference. The paid worker is able to travel, and to come in contact with the brethren he is working for. And because it is his avocation, his methods receive some kind of standardization and the key is pitched fairly low. Besides, he sees the lodges at their best. As a rule, there is generally an extra large crowd to receive the official visitor—he is listened to with attention, sees only the enthusiasm he may have aroused, and goes on to repeat the process elsewhere.
The voluntary worker is in quite a different position and so sees things differently. As a rule, even if he has Grand Lodge recognition and official standing, he is unable to travel and has to do most of his work by correspondence. He has the far harder task of trying to get people to help themselves. The efforts generally flicker fitfully for awhile and then die suddenly like a burnt out candle. Then too, the voluntary worker is usually something of a student himself, and he must be an enthusiast or he would never undertake the task, and as a result he is inclined to forget how much elementary, kindergarten work has to be done before any advanced study can be initiated.
Taking everything into consideration, there is a tendency now observable, here and there, to stop and take stock; to ask what it is really all about, and why and how? In short, the official Masonic Education Programs have run up against human nature or rather just plain nature. They have put in some kind of water supply, they have caught the horse and haltered him and have led him to the trough and he won't drink. The danger is that in reaction the whole effort may be abandoned. After all, if your horse won’t drink today, you can fairly safely count on his drinking tomorrow, so that there is no sense in destroying the watering trough.
This is why an attempt to survey the whole subject and get it in some kind of perspective is necessary. The causes for the recent interest in “Education” are by no means clear. That Masonry was instructive has always been taken for granted, but it was also taken for granted that all that was necessary was embodied in the rituals, and that attendance at the regular work of the lodge was sufficient for a complete Masonic education. American Grand Lodges have, since 1850 or thereabouts, taken great interest in ritual minutiae, much of it of trifling importance, and have expended more ingenuity and effort in aiming at a rigid and somewhat monotonous uniformity than has been devoted to maintaining its spirit, and in seeing that it was either understandable or understood. And there are still many jurisdictions where “Education” merely means teaching the ritual so efficiently that the pupils may recite it with the faultless accuracy of a gramophone.
Now we do not wish to be understood as saying this care is misplaced, though those who know anything of the evolution of the ritual know that it has been materially changed in every jurisdiction from what it was seventy-five years ago, and that the rituals of two hundred years ago would be hardly recognizable to the average American Mason. And for every one who knows this, there are a dozen who know that the rituals of different jurisdictions, and still more of different countries, vary almost as widely at the present day. And to all who are aware of these facts, the pains taken to preserve the ipsissima verba of one particular recension must appear in a different light to that in which the matter is seen generally by Grand Lecturers and Ritual Committees. Nevertheless at the worst, this preoccupation with the preservation of the exact formula is only an exaggeration of a necessary requirement, a one-sided development, in which the letter has become everything and the spirit left in the background. For the word is nothing without its meaning, and though the ritual is the text, the starting point of true Masonic education, it is its significance that is the essential thing. The form is not an end in itself, a magical incantation working ex opere operato, but ultimately only a means to an end that is other than itself.
A friend who served in the old Russian army as a surgeon (and being a Pole he was keenly critical of everything Russian) once told the present writer how, after the Russo-Japanese War, the army authorities decided, among other things, that the Russian soldier needed education. Doubtless he did, but the method adopted was rather crude. Apparently something like this happened: Orders were sent to Commanding Officers to establish regimental schools. The Commanding Officers “passed the buck” to their company officers. These again told their non-commissioned officers to get the men together and teach them. The writer’s informant attended one of the classes out of curiosity. The instructor had been assigned, as his subject, “The Telegraph.” The gist of his lecture was this: “I am to teach you all about the telegraph. Do you know what the telegraph is? No? Well I will tell you. The telegraph is the telegraph. This is what you have to learn.” And he made them recite in unison: “The telegraph is the telegraph.” And that was that. It may sound incredible, but it is probably perfectly true, for the Russian soldier was armed and equipped and munitioned in very much the same way.
Now far be it from us to suggest that anything like this has ever occurred in official attempts to educate the American Mason, and yet, one has a sneaking idea that there has been a remote resemblance in the methods adopted, to this extent at least, that the idea that education was needed outran knowledge of what to teach and how to teach it. In other words, the thing went off at half cock, and no definite aim having been taken, nothing in particular was hit. Needless to say there are some shining exceptions, still the indictment holds good, we fear, in too many cases.
The primary necessity in an educational movement is the selection and training of teachers. In theory, the Master is the instructor of his lodge; in practice he is, as a rule, utterly untrained in everything but the bare letter of the ritual; nor has he any chance to improve himself by experience, because by the time he has begun to learn something (if he has it in him) his term ends, and another untrained man is put in his place. After all, this is not so very different from the Russian method!
Now the lodge is the traditional organ by which Masonry functions, and Masons should be educated in the lodge. We have the machinery, but it has so long been disused, and is so rusty, that instead of putting it in operation again, we have been trying all kinds of makeshift substitutes, which if they work, would probably lead to embarrassing conflicts and overlappings of function and authority. Where to start is a most complex and difficult problem, far more so than has generally been realized.
As a contribution to its solution we will make a few suggestions. The first question is to decide quite definitely what is the proper scope of Masonic education, instruction, teaching. The second how to ensure trained teachers. That done, it is probable that the only difficulties left will prove to be really matters of detail only.
The first step is to distinguish clearly between teaching and research. This has not always been done, obvious as it may appear. Every Grand Lodge ought to foster research as much as possible, but it should not undertake it. Committees on Education should not be Research Committees, even if composed of Masonic students. The research worker is often a very poor teacher. His function is to provide the teacher with such information as he needs. Every Grand Lodge should have an adequate working library, with a trained librarian in charge. There are few Grand Lodges which could not afford this. There is no need for the librarian to be a man and a Mason. A trained woman could do the work quite competently; for the purpose of such a library is to make it possible for such brethren who are interested to get access to the books they need. But we doubt if the establishment of a library is the first step. There are much more elementary things to be done first.
Having set research aside as a thing by itself, a matter for the individual mainly, but in which the individual may be profitably assisted; let us turn to our first problem. What is it that should be taught, not to some, but to every Mason? What is it that corresponds to a common school training, that is elementary, well established, and that should be universally known? The ritual here gives us a plain answer. It is light, illumination. But perhaps this is only another case of “the telegraph is the telegraph,” somewhat disguised. Yet there is a recognized metaphorical meaning assigned to light and illumination, even a common everyday one, quite aside from any special Masonic symbolism. And while it is true that many have looked for (and some have found) a mystical illumination in the initiation, yet it is obvious that this is only for a select few. There is a plain meaning, within the reach of every initiate. It is simple and obvious and necessary, and like so many simple and obvious things is frequently overlooked, and like many necessary ones is often forgotten or not realized.
What happens is this: The candidate is introduced into a new circle, a fraternity, as an integral part of it, and to him is shown in form and symbol his social relationships and obligations in the light (it is difficult to avoid the term) of this fact. The elements of the new situation are not new, but the situation as a whole is new. His duties are merely new applications of moral precepts already known, but they are new applications to him. He may have imagined what they would be, but now he is to realize, to actualize them. To put it more generally, the first thing is to make him think to think out his new relationships, and that is the fundamental purpose of the Masonic symbols presented and explained to him, trite and obvious as all this may seem. Whatever else they may mean, they mean this first.
And the second thing is to put all this into practice—which is a matter of living and is outside the lodge. This is, or should be, Masonic work, spiritual building. In short, the Masonic primary education which should be universal is summed up in the familiar phrase “good and wholesome instruction for their labor.” But all this is in the ritual—of course it is; only it is too often not extracted from the ritual. Suppose a teacher recited the alphabet to a child on the first day of school, and then said, “Now go and read what you like,” it would seem somewhat more insane than even the education of the Russian soldier; yet this is the modern lodge practice in effect. The teachers have learned to say the alphabet and little more. Not being able to read themselves they cannot well teach others.
How then are the teachers to be taught? Let us keep close to the actual situation. Ideally many excellent plans would be possible, but any general movement towards improvement must be commenced, in the average lodge, with the average officers. There is the dead weight of insufficient knowledge, and there are a host of totally erroneous conceptions to be overcome. The difficulties are so great that any suggestion must be only tentative, but we are going to offer one that may seem rather radical, although it is quite in line with modern developments. The lodges have been in recent years more and more shorn of their original rights, liberties and responsibilities, by Grand Lodges, so that a new interference, one which might turn the American Craft back in the direction of the old ways, could not be objected to in principle. While there is already in many jurisdictions analogous legislation respecting the newly raised Master Masons. The suggestion is, that to qualify for office, a Mason should be obliged to pass an elementary examination in certain fundamental things.
To present the suggestion in more detail and to make it more tangible, let us suppose that no one could be appointed a Deacon in the lodge who did not have certificates from some competent authority. This would practically ensure that every Master would have this minimum qualification. And these are the subjects we would suggest. First, a written paper on a number of questions that would require knowledge of the Constitution and Code of the jurisdiction and, perhaps, the more recent decisions of Grand Masters. It is to be elementary, it is not to train Masonic lawyers. It is to make the potential Masters of lodges realize where to look for this information, and how to find it and apply it.
The second examination would be on the ritual. Not repeating it, the present machinery will serve for that, but understanding it. Again it must be elementary. Questions as to the meaning of unusual or obsolete words, of obscure phrases, with the suggestion that a good dictionary would clear up most of the difficulties. This is not memory work, but elementary research if one likes. The questions to be answered with the aid of any reference books needed, but honestly by the individual himself.
The third examination would be more advanced, and would necessitate some real practical thinking. The questions could be taken from almost any series of reports on grievances, or appeals. Present a number of hypothetical cases, of offenses against Masonic law, quarrels and disputes, and ask what the parties ought to have done had they acted as Masons should.
There seems nothing to prevent such requirements being made of those who have ambitions to “go through the chairs.” It would be no hardship on the potential officers. It is in their power to instruct themselves, it needs no new machinery to do this. A man who cannot extract the information he needs from a code or a dictionary, or think out the practical application of Masonic obligations to daily life, is not fit to be Master of a lodge. All that would be needed is the establishment of the examining and certifying authority. The examining could all be done by correspondence, from the central board, or it might be a feature of district meetings. But this is hardly worthwhile to try and work out now. The main thing is to grasp the strategic points of the situation.
It is clear that were all Masters of lodges made to realize that there was much more to their office than merely repeating the formulas of the ritual, some advance would almost automatically follow. The questions asked by newly admitted brethren would be answered instead of being evaded; questioning indeed would be encouraged. It would not be “highbrow stuff,” it would be as well within the powers of the farmer and mechanic as of the lawyer and clergyman. True, many of our members might be bored by it, and think much of it sermonizing. But probably they either need it themselves, or else they should not be in the lodge at all. If it led to the latter element getting out, the Craft would be benefitted thereby.
Here then, as we see it, is the proper scope of Masonic education. In this, Grand Lodges have a plain right and duty to act. It is nothing new, it is only trying to recover what we have to great extent lost. Beyond this it is probable that a Grand Lodge should not go, at least, not as now constituted. “Higher education,” as we may call it, is for the individual, and for unofficial organizations of individuals, quite free from special and local orthodoxies. The search for truth, for new facts, must be free if it is to be successful. Among such agencies stands the Research Society. But as we have said, Grand Lodges should help the individual worker by means of libraries, and wherever dual membership is permitted, Research Lodges might well be encouraged. All this, however, is relatively non-essential; it is the primary education, implied by Masonic ritual and symbolism, that should be made a reality; and once the problem is seen in its true bearings Masonic authorities will doubtless seek some way to recover the effectiveness of the lodge in its teaching and instructional functions.
Monday, July 13, 2026
‘Washington apron in The Occupied City’
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Brad Farwell for MCNY ‘The Occupied City: New York and the Revolutionary War’ is on exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York, at Fifth Avenue & 103rd St. |
Among the artifacts displayed currently in the Museum of the City of New York is Holland Lodge 8’s apron owned and worn by George Washington. The exhibit, “The Occupied City: New York and the Revolutionary War,” will close next April, so get there!
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A George Washington apron. He was an Honorary Member of Holland Lodge 8. See the artifact at MCNY before April 25, 2027. |
From the publicity:
Marking the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution, this major exhibition, developed in partnership with the Gotham Center for New York City History, transforms the Museum’s entire third floor into a 7,000-square-foot immersive journey through Revolutionary-era New York. Framing the Revolution as a story of civic choice and consequence, the exhibition underscores how decisions made by New Yorkers 250 years ago continue to reverberate across the city and the nation today.
Visitors will trace New York’s pivotal role in the conflict, from the first sparks of rebellion in 1763 to its emergence as the new nation’s first capital in 1790. A crucial strategic site for both the Patriots and the British, New York’s revolutionary experience comes vividly to life through historical objects, multimedia installations, and interactive environments. “The Occupied City” tells the powerful and complex stories of revolutionaries and loyalists, enslaved and free black New Yorkers, women, Native peoples, and others who shaped and were shaped by this turbulent time. The exhibition highlights the resilience of New Yorkers, who endured seven years of British occupation, devastating fires, and violent battles, only to emerge as residents of the nation’s new capital.
Highlights include a recreated eighteenth century tavern and a walk-through experience of “Canvas Town,” along with digital dramatizations of key events like the Battle of New York. Visitors will explore immersive installations, including a recreation of New York City in the Revolutionary Era through scenes drawn from the video game Assassin’s Creed III. This exhibition invites visitors to see the Revolution not as a distant myth, but as a lived—and deeply contested—urban experience.
I want to see this tavern.
The Washington apron is not unknown to the city’s museums. It’s been twenty-five years, but Fraunces Tavern Museum had a Masonic exhibit for several months featuring many items on loan from the Chancellor Robert R. Livingston Masonic Library. Somewhere in my study lies an envelope of photos—prints from before digital cameras—I shot then, including close-ups of this and other aprons.
The Museum of the City of New York is open seven days a week. Click here for hours and tickets.
Sunday, July 12, 2026
‘Grotto research college?!’
I don’t know what to think of this. My wariness of novelties in Freemasonry, compounded by knowing hardly anyone is interested in research, leaves me skeptical. Yet I hope to be proven wrong.
What’s he talking about?
Two weeks ago, an announcement came via social media heralding the start of the “College of the Enchanted Persian Rite” within the MOVPER.
The Mystic Order of Veiled Prophets of the Enchanted Realm is a Masonic fraternity open to Master Masons that serves as a kind of valve to release energy constrained by the formality of Craft lodge life. During its early decades, there were grand lodges that prohibited Grotto activities in lodge buildings because of its emphasis on frivolity. Like the Shriners, the MOVPER adopted charitable aims, which had the effect of calming doubtful grand masters.
The organizers of this fledgling college say:
Introducing the College of the Enchanted Persian Rite or, for short, CPR. This will be an association that is about research, study, and creative works pertaining to Grotto, Persia, etc.
Contact any member listed to gain membership information. As of now we will be doing intake at Supreme Council. We will host Zoom meetings throughout the year, and receive copies of material Prophets have published, researched, or studied.
We are not about changing ritual; we are about studying and sharing knowledge. Anything the College does is open to the realm.
I’m not familiar with inaugural Shahanshah Vizier (presiding officer) Avi Nash, but evidently he is with Sitara Grotto in El Paso, Texas. Their website says:
Monarch Avi Nash commenced on his Masonic journey in 2003 in Beaumont, Texas, where he was raised as a Master Mason.
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| Avi Nash |
Monarch Nash’s Masonic legacy spans a wide constellation of affiliated bodies, including York Rite, Scottish Rite, the Grand College of Rites of the USA, the Order of the Sword of Bunker Hill, Order of Eastern Star, Order of the Amaranth, High Twelve International, National Sojourners, and Heroes of ’76, and he holds Honorary Membership in the Order of DeMolay.
Adding to his distinguished service, Monarch Nash is the author of The Masked Khurasan: Al-Muqanna, The Veiled Prophet, a rich and illuminating historical biography designed to educate and inspire fellow Prophets about the legendary mystic Mokanna, whose veiled legacy continues to echo through the Realm.
There actually are aspects of Grotto that are surprisingly erudite. When I joined years ago, I poked around to learn more about what I’d gotten myself into, and quickly found the entire Grotto identity is based on an epic poem published in 1817 by English poet Thomas Moore. “The Veiled Prophet of Khorassan” is part of the poem “Lalla Rookh.” Brittanica says:
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| Thomas Moore |
This CPR is invitational, which makes me more skeptical, but if you want to get involved, I guess talk to your Grotto’s secretary, who probably won’t know a thing about it. If you like research and education, there may be a research lodge in your area that would love to see you at its meetings.
Saturday, July 11, 2026
‘Virginia legislature honors Masons’ Hall’
The brethren will gather at Masons’ Hall in Richmond next Saturday for the presentation of a Virginia legislature resolution that salutes the Masons’ Hall Historic Preservation Foundation “as an expression of the General Assembly’s admiration for the foundation’s contributions to historical preservation in the Commonwealth.” From the publicity:
You are cordially invited to attend the Official Presentation of House Joint Resolution No. 63, commending the Masons’ Hall Historic Preservation Foundation for its dedicated work in preserving and interpreting the rich history of Masons’ Hall, one of the most treasured landmarks of our Craft.
Saturday, July 18 at 11 a.m.
Masons’ Hall
1807 East Franklin Street
Richmond
Delegate Hyland Franklin “Buddy” Fowler, Jr., member of the Virginia House of Delegates for the 59th District, will present the resolution.
A reception with light refreshments will follow the presentation. We look forward to sharing this meaningful moment with you and celebrating the ongoing stewardship of one of Virginia’s most significant Masonic sites.
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| Magpie file photo |
Fowler, a Republican who has represented his district since 2014, introduced the resolution on January 20. It was agreed to by the House of Delegates on the twenty-sixth. The Senate did likewise three days later. The bill was passed by both houses on April 2.
House Joint Resolution No. 63WHEREAS, the Masons’ Hall Historic Preservation Foundation has greatly served the community by preserving Masons’ Hall in Richmond and publicly interpreting its profound significance to the history of the United States, the Commonwealth, and the City of Richmond; andWHEREAS, the Virginia General Assembly, supporting Thomas Jefferson’s proposal, voted to move the Capitol of the Commonwealth to Richmond in 1780 during the American Revolutionary War; andWHEREAS, shortly after the Treaty of Paris officially ended the American Revolutionary War, the cornerstone of the current Virginia State Capitol building was laid on August 18, 1785, in a Masonic ceremony conducted by Richmond Lodge No. 3 of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons; andWHEREAS, just two months later, on October 12, 1785, the same Masons laid the cornerstone for the historic Masons’ Hall in Richmond’s Shockoe Bottom, located at 1807 East Franklin Street; andWHEREAS, the construction of Masons’ Hall was led by Edmund Randolph, Governor of Virginia and the future first Attorney General of the United States, and John Marshall, the future Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court; andWHEREAS, Masons’ Hall provided the only public meeting space for Richmond’s 1,500 residents, along with space for the Henrico County Courthouse, in the post-revolutionary Federal Period; andWHEREAS, Richmond Randolph Lodge No. 19 of the Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, named in honor of Governor Edmund Randolph, was chartered in Masons’ Hall on October 29, 1787, and has met there continuously to this day; andWHEREAS, Masons’ Hall is recognized as one of only six remaining 18th century buildings in Richmond along with the Virginia State Capitol, the John Marshall House, the Old Stone House, St. John’s Church, and the Woodward House; andWHEREAS, in recognition of its historical and architectural significance, Masons’ Hall is listed on the Virginia Landmarks Register and the National Register of Historic Places; andWHEREAS, the Masons’ Hall Historic Preservation Foundation was established in recent years to spearhead preservation and public education efforts at Masons’ Hall, ensuring that its importance to the history of the United States, the Commonwealth, and the City of Richmond would be appreciated for generations to come; now, therefore, be itRESOLVED by the House of Delegates, the Senate concurring, That the General Assembly hereby commend the Masons’ Hall Historic Preservation Foundation for its legacy of service in pursuit of its mission; and, be itRESOLVED FURTHER, That the Clerk of the House of Delegates prepare a copy of this resolution for presentation to the Masons’ Hall Historic Preservation Foundation as an expression of the General Assembly’s admiration for the foundation’s contributions to historical preservation in the Commonwealth.
Friday, July 10, 2026
‘Welcome to these Eleven Gentlemen of Charleston’
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| Available from the SRRS. Click here. |
Speaking of Masonic writers named Harris (see Tuesday’s post), the Scottish Rite Research Society’s new bonus book for members is Ray Baker Harris’ Eleven Gentlemen of Charleston, his collection of biographical sketches of the brethren who founded the Mother Supreme Council of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry. It has been out about a month, and now is available for sale to everyone. Even autographed copies, signed by Arturo de Hoyos and B. Chris Ruli, can be had.
I am no longer a Scottish Rite Mason (buy me a beer sometime and I’ll tell you, &c., &c.), so this material isn’t as fascinating to me as it would have been earlier in life, but I maintain an appreciation for these founders. I’ve never really known anything about them, except that four were Jewish, which I consider to be a remarkable circumstance given demographics and, frankly, odds.
Originally published in 1959, Eleven Gentlemen was written by Harris while serving as Supreme Council’s Librarian. It must be nice to have the library and archives of the modern Southern Jurisdiction as your workplace. As you know, the original Supreme Council for the United States of America was established May 31, 1801 (this volume is part of the Supreme Council’s dodransbicentennial—look it up—anniversary celebration), but what you might not have known is how its archives were destroyed during the Civil War.
The Supreme Council was seated at Charleston, which suffered repeated devastations. The war began there in April 1861 with the attack on Fort Sumter, located on a man-made island in Charleston Harbor. That December, a fire destroyed much of the city. Through the war, the U.S. Navy heavily shelled Charleston. Near the war’s end in 1865, as Gen. Sherman’s army plowed through South Carolina, Confederate forces fled the city after setting fires to destroy more of it.
This book’s introduction quotes Albert Pike at the May 1878 Supreme Council session:
I am often asked why we do not publish our old Transactions, to which I am compelled to reply that we have none to publish. We have no record of the transactions at Charleston from 1801 to 1860. What minutes we had were destroyed, with many papers, pamphlets, and books of the Secretary-General during the war. I never saw any of them, and do not know how full or how meagre they were.
So, don’t feel inferior if, like me, you know little about Scottish Rite’s founding brothers.
Because I want you to enjoy, and profit from, the book, I won’t overshare its contents, but let me just name the founders and supplement the list with life dates and birth & death places:
Abraham Alexander: born circa 1743 in London; died February 21, 1816 at Charleston.
Isaac Auld: born February 25, 1770 in Pennsylvania; died October 1826 in South Carolina.
Thomas Bartholomew Bowen: born circa 1742 in Ireland; died July 12, 1805 near Charleston.
Frederick Dalcho: born October 1770 in London; died November 24, 1836 at Charleston.
Moses Clara Levy: born circa 1749 in Poland; died March 1839 at Charleston.
John Mitchell: born circa 1741 in Ireland; died January 25, 1816 at Charleston.
James Moultrie: born September 1766 in Charleston; died there November 20, 1836.
Le Comte Alexandre Francois Auguste de Grasse: born February 14, 1765 in Versailles; died June 10, 1845 at Paris.
Jean Baptiste Marie Delahogue: born circa 1744 in France; died April 13, 1822 at Paris.
Israel De Lieben: born circa 1740 in Prague; died January 28, 1807 at Charleston.
Emanuel De La Motta: born November 2, 1760 on St. Croix, West Indies; died May 17, 1821 at Charleston.
Interesting to note six were born in the 1740s and the others between 1760 and ’70, showing two age groups in unity. Alexander and Mitchell died within weeks of each other in 1816; Dalcho and Moultrie died within days in ’36. Only two were born in what would become the United States. Eight died in or near Charleston, and Auld about forty miles away. The four Jewish brethren (Alexander, De La Motta, De Lieben, and Levy) are interred in the Coming Street Cemetery, the oldest Jewish burial ground in the American South. Yes, Moultrie was from the prominent Moultrie family. He was a nephew of the Revolutionary War general who designed my favorite flag of the war.
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| In typography, a ligature is a single character formed by joining two or more characters. |
I close this edition of The Magpie Mason with praise for a style element you are sure to notice while reading. In its typography, Eleven Gentlemen features the Adorn font family. You see the ligatures—connected pairs of letters, like ct and st. For example, “Past Master” appears as “Past Master.” Something special for the typophiles. Here on this rude blog, you see their use disrupts line height, but the book is smooth reading.
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
‘Brotherhood of the bean’
The United Grand Lodge of England’s Special Interest Lodges (I think once known as affinity lodges) continue to proliferate. Joining Craft lodges comprised of lovers of beers & ales, aficionados of science fiction, fans of cricket & football, and many other options, is a potential “coffee lodge.”
Word percolated on social media this week:
Let’s brew a London coffee lodge. A new Masonic lodge bringing together baristas, coffee shop owners, those working in the coffee trade, and anyone with a genuine love of coffee. Whether you craft it, serve it, sell it, source it, roast it, or simply enjoy it, we invite you to register your interest and be part of something fresh, social, and full of flavor. Hit the link to register your interest.
In the replies is Bro. Jacob, who says: “Love that idea. Great possibilities for the Festive Board. A coffee tamper in place of a gavel could be fun too!”
I hope it works out. Maybe could mark a return of Masonic lodges to London’s coffee houses.
Now, let’s form a lodge of pipe smokers for brothers of the briar.
Labels:
affinity lodges,
coffee,
Special Interest Lodges,
UGLE
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
‘The author of our charges and prayers’
Born on this date in 1768:
Bro. Thaddeus Mason Harris!
Who?
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Magpie file photo Portrait of RW Thaddeus Mason Harris exhibited in the Boston Masonic Building. |
The clergyman, Harvard librarian, and first Grand Chaplain of the Grand Lodge of Masons in Massachusetts (nice resume) is the author of inspiring pieces of Craft lodge ritual familiar to—I think—most of the brethren in the United States, to wit: “You are now about to quit this sacred retreat of friendship and virtue…”
This has been embraced by grand lodges beyond the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and its phrasing varies a little from place to place. Here in New York we call it the Harris Charge, and it is a favorite among ritualists and all who value the meaning of Masonry. But that’s not all!
First, some biography.
Thaddeus Mason Harris was born July 7, 1768 in Charlestown, Massachusetts to William and Rebekah (Mason) Harris. He would be the eldest of seven children in a family that was uprooted by the Revolutionary War, literally having to abandon their home and possessions to walk to Choxet in 1775. His family in destitution and with his father dying in the winter of ’78, he had several homes during childhood.
In his preteen years, Harris lived with different families. At ten, he resided in Templeton with the minister of that town, and it was there where he became affected with a love of books. At eleven, he relocated to Shrewsbury and lived with a minister who provided a fatherly influence. At fourteen, he left for Cambridge with the goal of enrolling in the recently organized Harvard University. It wasn’t to be, yet, due to finance, so he returned to his remarried mother, now in Malden.
Unsuccessful in finding employment, his grandfather, Register of Deeds at Cambridge, made Thaddeus one of his secretaries. There, he befriended a minster who encouraged him to enter college, and, in 1783, Harris enrolled in Harvard. Truly a kind of existence that would be popularized a century later in the stories of Horatio Alger.
Harris was eulogized by his successor as pastor of The First Church of Dorchester, Rev. Nathaniel Hall, who related this story:
...he set off to meet his mother, as by previous arrangement, in Boston; having nothing, in possession or prospect, but a few coppers which he had transferred from his trunk to his pocket as he left his room; and these—so strong were his benevolent sympathies—he gave to a poor crippled soldier that he met on his way, and who, faint and famishing, solicited his aid. As he went on, deeply depressed at his destitute condition and in despair at his seeming fate, he perceived something adhering to the end of his rude staff he had cut on the way; and found it to be a gold ring, into which his staff had struck itself as he walked, and having engraved upon it the words “God speed thee, friend,” its pecuniary worth proving sufficient for his present exigency; and its moral value, incalculable; helping to clothe him in what he felt he needed a cheerful faith and confidence in God. The whole incident, acting upon his sensitive nature, and predisposed as he was to see in everything which befell him a peculiar and sacred significance, subdued and overwhelmed him; and appears to have given to his character a stronger religious determination. “That motto,” in his own words, “has ever been the support of my faith when it was feeble, and the strength of my heart when it was faint.”
He graduated Harvard in 1787 (in the same class as John Quincy Adams, who would become an avid anti-Mason forty years later). After Harvard, Harris spent a year working at a school in Worcester, but returned to the university to pursue theological studies. Harvard appointed him its Librarian in 1791, and he served for two years before being ordained as Unitarian minister of the First Parish Church in Dorchester, from which he retired in 1836. He earned a Doctorate of Theological Studies from Harvard in 1813. He died April 3, 1842 at Dorchester, and is buried in the Old North Burying Place in Uphams Corner, Dorchester.
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| RW Benjamin Huntoon |
Of the many incidents in his early life; the precocious developement of talents, which gave promise of intellectual eminence the ardent thirst for knowledge, and the almost instinctive acquisition of learning, which attracted the admiration, and secured the patronage of strangers as well as friends—and those signal instances of the remarkable, if not miraculous smiles of a gracious Providence upon his orphanage—and the encouraging tokens of Divine aid in his despondency, which always kept alive a fervent glow of pious gratitude in his heart, and spread the brilliancy of hope upon every gathering cloud of after discouragement, like the bow of promise, that brightens athwart the lowering tempest, and bid “God speed” to his every literary effort and holy enterprise, of these, and the numberless vernal blossoms of that delicate constitution of mind, which ripened into so mellow a harvest of unassuming goodness of that tender sensibility, which seemed like a lid, “which God had placed over the eye of his soul to guard its holy crystal from impurity”—time will permit me to say nothing. These are details, which belong to the biographer, rather than the eulogist….The writings of Dr. Harris in the departments of Literature and Natural History, Theology, Biography, and Antiquity will form a solid and durable monument of his claims to public esteem and gratitude. They deservedly hold a conspicuous rank and occupy a large space in our National literature. His Natural History of the Bible, a work of great learning, diligent and extensive reading, has met with an honorable reception, and passed through several editions in England.... As a Scholar, a Naturalist, Antiquarian, and a Divine, the memory of Dr. Harris will go down to posterity with enduring esteem and lasting reputation. As a man, in the social relations of obliging neighbor, entertaining associate, and facetious companion for he had a vein of good humored wit and innocent pleasantry—Dr. Harris has left a pattern of amiable excellence, of which it is difficult to speak too favorably, and which will not soon be forgotten, by a large circle of acquaintances, extending from Maine to Georgia.As the kind Pastor, the religious counsellor, the sympathizing friend, in all the varying “lights and shadows” of ministerial trial and duty, he exhibited a heart full and overflowing, with the milk of human kindness and fellow-feeling. Most truly did he “rejoice with those that rejoiced, and wept with those that wept.” In his every look and deportment there was manifested a singleness of intention, a simplicity of purpose, a gentleness of spirit, a patience of love, and a meekness of charity, of rare attainment on earth. In his manners, there was an affability, frankness and child-like sincerity which won the affection and confidence of all who approached him. His very countenance seemed radiant with the pure benedictions of a generous, disinterested soul, communicating instinctively its gladness or its gloom to every beholder the faithful mirror of all the workings and emotions the cloud and sunshine of the inner man.In his study, there was an arrangement, a classification, an order, in every department of intellectual pursuit, of learning, and of business, which enabled him to avail himself of all his stores of knowledge, and of interest, with the greatest facility and the most indubitable exactness. “He had literally a place for every thing, and every thing in its place.” This, with his constant and most assiduous employment of time, enabled him to perform an amount of literary labor, and practical good works, truly astonishing, considering his many interruptions from sickness and constitutional debility….This exclusive and appropriate service cannot be deemed obtrusive or uncalled for by any who “would live respected, or die regretted” by their fellow travelers to that country “from whose bourne no traveler returns.”The elevated rank, the conspicuous station, which Dr. Harris held in the various departments and distinguished offices of the Masonic household; the many important services which he rendered by his talents and his virtues, by his active labors, and personal sacrifices, entitle him to the full meed of Masonic gratitude and love. He was an ardent, consistent, steadfast Mason. He brought the energy of his gifted mind—the patronage of his immaculate reputation and the weight of his personal character—as a willing offering to the altar of Freemasonry—for which generous oblation, he has received, and will ever receive, the respect and veneration of the Fraternity through all coming time. His first great Masonic work was the editing of a collation, revision and publication of the Constitutions of the Ancient and Honorable Fraternity of Free and Accepted Masons, a quarto volume, printed at Worcester, Mass., 1792. A work which he accomplished with the accustomed diligence, and “known fidelity” with which he performed every enterprise confided to his care. His various, occasional addresses, while Grand Chaplain of the Grand Lodge—his Masonic defenses—anonymous tracts and his volume of Masonic Discourses, published in 1801, constitute a large part, and valuable portion of the Masonic classic literature of America. They contain a faithful and dispassionate exhibition of our principles, in that chaste and captivating style, that graceful and easy diction, that forcible and earnest language which characterize all the productions, which he has given to the public. They are a rich legacy to our Fraternity from an accomplished mind, a ripe scholar, and an intelligent Mason, and they will connect his name and his memory with whatever is dear and hallowed in our recollections of his amiable virtues and personal endowments….
Front cover of RW Huntoon’s eulogy.
In the Masonic heart he will be held in undying remembrance—with the immortality of the affections. In that simple memorial, of the justly appreciated services, which he had rendered to the cause of Freemasonry, in the capacities of Grand Chaplain, and Corresponding Grand Secretary, given by the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts, A. L. 5816, this sentiment is forcibly expressed in the touching inscription: Memoria tenemus, quæ non remunerare possumus. (Memory shall retain a sense of obligation which we can never remunerate.)In the fiery ordeal, that inquisition of prejudice, that hurricane of malignity, through which our Institution has been forced to pass, Dr. Harris was firm and unshaken. From his age, his character, his profession, and high standing in Society, he was selected as a prominent mark for the shafts of anti-masonic proscription and vituperation. His extreme susceptibility to the veriest breath of censure, his shrinking delicacy of feeling at every rough accent of reproach, made this attack the more unmanly, not to say cowardly. He was frequently insulted by printed papers sent to him, containing the most scurrilous abuse of his character, as a Christian and a minister of the gospel, because he would not, with the vaunting, self-styled champions of religion, piety, and patriotism, renounce our time-hallowed Institution—whose principles he had early espoused, whose patrons he deeply revered, whose members he sincerely loved, whose generous philanthropy, and expansive charity accorded with the native feelings and instinctive promptings of his large, noble, and humane heart, his Brotherly Love, and universal good will to man. His whole character was the complete impersonation of Masonic benevolence. His only prayer, for his most abusive traducers, was “Father forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
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| Title page of 1819 edition printed in Philadelphia. |
To really get to know Harris, I recommend to all thinking Freemasons his book Discourses, Delivered on Public Occasions, Illustrating the Principles, Displaying the Tendency, and Vindicating the Design, of Free Masonry, first printed in 1801. There’s a lot he shares in its more than 350 pages. Chapter 1, for instance, recalls the Charges of a Freemason in Anderson’s Constitutions, but benefits from generations of hindsight and from Harris’ wise counsel. He’s simply more instructive and specific.
This book includes several items you may have memorized during your tenure as a Freemason, such as:
The Ancient Prayer,
at making or Opening.
Most holy and glorious Lord God, the great Architect of the Universe; the giver of all good gifts and graces: Thou hast promised, that where two or three are gathered together in thy name, thou wilt be in the midst of them. In thy name we assemble, most humbly beseeching thee to bless us in all our undertakings, that we may know and serve thee aright, and that all our actions may tend to thy glory, and to our advancement in knowledge and virtue.
*And we beseech thee, O Lord God, to bless this our present assembling; and grant that this our new Brother may prove true and faithful. Endue him with a competency of thy divine wisdom, that he may, with the secrets of Free Masonry, be able to unfold the mysteries of godliness. And may he and we walk in the light of thy countenance; and when the trials of our probationary state are over, be admitted into the Temple not made with hands, eternal in the heavens ! — Amen.
*This paragraph is to be omitted, except when a candidate is about to be initiated.
A prayer used at opening a Lodge.
May the favor of Heaven be upon this meeting; and as it is happily begun, may it be conducted with order, and closed with harmony. Amen.
A Prayer used at closing the Lodge.
May the blessing of Heaven rest upon us, and all regular masons! May brotherly love prevail, and every moral and social virtue cement us! — Amen.
And, of course, our Harris Charge (a longer form than what you might know):
Charge at the Closing of a Lodge
You are now to quit this sacred retreat of friendship and virtue, to mix again with the world. Amidst its concerns and employments, forget not the duties you have heard so frequently inculcated, and forcibly recommended in this Lodge. Be, therefore, diligent, prudent, temperate, discreet. Remember also, that around this altar you have solemnly and repeatedly promised to befriend and relieve, with unhesitating cordiality, so far as shall be in your power, every brother who shall need your assistance: That you have promised to remind him, in the most tender manner, of his failings, and aid his reformation. Vindicate his character when wrongfully traduced. Suggest in his behalf the most candid, favourable, and paliating circumstances, when his conduct is justly reprehended. That the world may observe how Masons love one another.
These generous principles are to extend farther. Every human being has a claim upon your kind offices. So that we enjoin it upon you “to do good unto all,” while we recommend it more “especially to the household of the faithful.”
By diligence in the duties of your respective callings, by liberal benevolence, and diffusive charity, by constancy and fidelity in your friendships, by uniformly just, amiable, and virtuous deportment, discover the beneficial and happy effects of this ancient and honorable institution.
Let it not be supposed that you have here labored in vain, and spent your strength for nought; for your work is with the Lord, and your recompense with your God.
Finally, brethren, farewell. Be ye all of one mind. Live in peace. And may the God of love and peace delight to dwell with and to bless you!
I’ll close this long edition of The Magpie Mason with what I consider an oddity:
A Prayer, said at the opening
of a Lodge,
or making a new brother used
by Jewish Free Masons.
O Lord, excellent art thou in thy truth, there is nothing great in comparison to thee; for thine is the praise, from all the works of thy hands, for evermore.
Enlighten us, we beseech thee, in the true knowledge of Masonry: by the sorrows of Adam, thy first made man; by the blood of Abel, thy holy one; by the righteousness of Seth, in whom thou art well pleased; and by thy covenant with Noah, in whose architecture thou wast pleased to save the seed of thy beloved; number us not among those that know not thy statutes, nor the divine mysteries of the secret Cabbala.
But grant, we beseech thee, that the ruler of this Lodge may be endued with knowledge and wisdom, to instruct us, and explain his secret mysteries, as our holy brother Moses did (in his Lodge) to Aaron, Eleazar and Ithamar (the sons of Aaron) and the seventy elders of Israel.
And grant that we may understand, learn, and keep all the statutes and commandments of the Lord, and this holy mystery, pure and undented unto our lives end. Amen, Lord.
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